Can you prove it? And what kind of system and its trading style (timeframe etc.) do you mean?Correctly placed stops will enhance a system's performance.
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Can you prove it? And what kind of system and its trading style (timeframe etc.) do you mean?Correctly placed stops will enhance a system's performance.
What does the entry have to do with the stop, if any?That is evidence of a terrible entry system.
If there were no losers, then nobody would make any profit...Successful trading is very very easy and it incorporates the use of correctly placed stops. Most traders however lose money.

If there were no losers, then nobody would make any profit...![]()
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.What does the entry have to do with the stop, if any?
Correctly placed stops will enhance a system's performance.
But that would mean that you can correctly forecast the path of the trade...The better the entry, the less you will need a stop. Simple logic,but very important.
And what do you do immediately after entry when the trade runs against you?Exactly, because the definition of a stop is: the place where the profits should be protected maximal while reducing the losses to the minimum.

But that would mean that you can correctly forecast the path of the trade...
How is your success rate in predicting the direction of the trade? And over which timeframe length does it work best?
And what do you do immediately after entry when the trade runs against you?
You get stopped out... multiple times makes a big sum...
But I get your point: a good planning for the entry point is a good thing to do, right.